It is not a straw man. It just exposes the flaw in your reasoning so you don’t want to deal with it.
OK, I’ll deal with it. It’s exactly like subjecting the child to painful surgery in order to cure him or her. Such is completely moral. The scenario deals with one person, and that one person’s best interests are in mind. This falls under the principle of double effect; the surgery is done to fix the patient, and the pain is a necessary and forseen side effect, although it is a real stretch to imagine a scenario where one would have to be tortured to save their life.
In the case of torture to extract information, the person being tortured does not benefit from the torture.
These are two completely different situations; your analogy is completely flawed!
My reasoning is in line with Church teaching. You are rejecting Church teaching as it pertains to torture; that is clear from your extreme views that you have posted in this thread.
At least you should have the intellectual honesty to admit that. If you disagree with Church teaching, fine. But don’t try to pee down my back and tell me it’s raining. Certainly there is some grey area that we’ve been discussing when it comes to what constitutes torture and what does not, we agree on that. But you’ve said that clear torture is justified to save lives, and this is not the view of the Catholic Church.
Such does not have anything to do with “flaws” in my logic, it is the teaching of the Roman Catholic Church, like it or not.
:banghead: You fail to see that.

Sorry that I cannot be more convincing, so I’ll quit trying. I’m sure you’ll want to have the last word on this, so go ahead…